The designation given to a particular aircraft can be broken down to provide information about that specific aircraft.
A hypothetical example shows a typical designation, and what each section is. Tables below indicate possible codes used for each section, what their meanings were, and the time period in which they were used – not all codes were in use at the same time, and some codes, such as P for pursuit were changed to F for fighter for a given aircraft while they were in service, so that the Lockheed P-80 was redesignated as the Lockheed F-80. The portion of the designation after the subtype may be omitted in normal use. The hyphen before the block number may be replaced with the word "block", and in some cases the block number may be omitted.
This information, along with the name of the service (USAAC, USAAF, USAF), the base (if permanently assigned) and the serial number was painted on the forward fuselage side under the cockpit.
Status
Mission-Modifier
Mission-
Model
Subtype
-Block Number
-Production Facility Code
X
W
B-
29
A
-10 or Block 10
-BO
Status Prefix
(generally applied only to specific aircraft)
Code
Meaning
Period
E
Exempt from modification orders (loaned to outside organizations)
1946–1955
G
Grounded permanently (for groundcrew instruction)
1924–1962
J
Temporarily modified for Special Tests (e.g. NACA)
1956–1962
N
Permanently modified for Special Tests (e.g. NACA)
1956–1962
R
Restricted (e.g. no aerobatics, no passengers or similar)
1943–1947
X
Experimental pre-production development aircraft
1925–1962
Y
Service test pending production orders
1928–1962
Y1
Funding from outside normal fiscal year procurement
1931–1936
Z
Obsolete - limits maintenance and repairs
1928–1962
Mission Modifier prefix
Used when an aircraft has been modified for a different role from originally designed.
In theory each new design in a specific Mission category is numbered in sequence starting at 1, so that succeeding designs are numbered 2,3,4 etc. however numbers were occasionally skipped.
Sub-type
Minor modifications to a basic design are usually given a sequentially assigned letter denoting the particular subtype, starting with A and continuing with B, C, D, etc. In general, no additional meaning can be deduced from the sub-type letter.
Block Number
Analogous to the order number, these help not just to identify when an airframe was built, but in some types distinguish changes that occurred during production not identified by the sub-type letter, as between the Republic P-47 Thunderbolt razorback variant and the bubble canopy variant. Block numbers are unique to each type of aircraft.
Production facility code
Each factory producing aircraft for the USAAF was assigned a two letter code to distinguish between the product of one facility from another. This was important because parts were not always interchangeable between different plants, and the aircraft may have required different modifications during service.[1]
Aircraft ordered by foreign governments but taken over by the US Government often used the manufacturer's internal designations rather than the designation used for similar aircraft ordered by the US Government, so that the Consolidated LB-30 was a B-24 ordered by the British but not delivered, and the Vultee V.77 was similarly an AT-19.